Hindenburg Video Shows Swastika
The Hindenberg airship exploded over a field in New Jersey 76 years ago today, on May 6, 1937. Dramatic newsreel footage, flagged by the Public Domain Review, offers
gorras obey a close look at the disaster.
35 people died and 62 passengers and crew survived when the 804foot airship suddenly burst
gorras new era into flames while landing in Lakehurst.
Channel 4 last month claimed to have finally confirmed the cause of the
red bull gorras crash. Their team of experts concluded that the Hindenburg's demise was brought on by static electricity.
The Hindenburg
cheap snapbacks completed 30 transatlantic trips after its maiden voyage from Friedrichshafen, Germany, in 1936.
The
wholesale hats video also features startling, aerial views of the swastikaadorned zeppelin flying high above
cheap new era hats the Manhattan skyline, just a few years before Germany and the United States were at war.
FILE
obey snapback hats wholesale In this Nov. 2, 1931 file photograph, the USS Navy Air Cruiser Akron flies over lower Manhattan's financial
obey snapbacks hats district in New York City. The Akron went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed
cheap snapback hats wholesale 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg, four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. (AP Photo/File)
Picture dated April 1936 of the dining rPicture dated April 1936 of the dining room of the German giant zeppelin 'Hindenburg'. Pride of the German Third Reich, the Hindenburg, the largest aircraft ever built, burst into flames 06 May 1937, 200 feet over its intended landing spot at New Jersey's Lakehurst Naval Air Station, killing 35 of its 97 passengers, along with one crewman on the ground. (Photo credit should read OFF/AFP/Getty Images)
Image dated of the 30's showing German giant airshNEW YORK, UNITED STATES: Image dated of the 30's showing German giant airship Hindenburg flying over Manhattan island in New York. (Photo credit should read AFP/AFP/Getty Images)
Picture dated May 1936 of German giant zPicture dated May 1936 of German giant zeppelin 'Hindenburg', in Lakehurst, USA. Pride of the German Third Reich, the Hindenburg, the largest aircraft ever built, burst into flames 06 May 1937, 200 feet over its intended landing spot at New Jersey's Lakehurst Naval Air Station, killing 35 of its 97 passengers, along with one crewman on the ground. (Photo credit should read OFF/AFP/Getty Images)
Picture dated 21 May 1936 of German gianPicture dated 21 May 1936 of German giant zeppelin 'Hindenburg', in Lakehurst, USA. Pride of the German Third Reich, the Hindenburg, the largest aircraft ever built, burst into flames 06 May 1937, 200 feet over its intended landing spot at New Jersey's Lakehurst Naval Air Station, killing 35 of its 97 passengers, along with one crewman on the ground. (Photo credit should read OFF/AFP/Getty Images)
Picture dated May 1936 of German giant zPicture dated May 1936 of German giant zeppelin 'Hindenburg', in Lakehurst, USA. Pride of the German Third Reich, the Hindenburg, the largest aircraft ever built, burst into flames 06 May 1937, 200 feet over its intended landing spot at New Jersey's Lakehurst Naval Air Station, killing 35 of its 97 passengers, along with one crewman on the ground. (Photo credit should read OFF/AFP/Getty Images)
FILE In this April 23, 1933 file photograph, the wreckage of the naval dirigible USS Akron is brought to the surface of the ocean off the coast of New Jersey. The Akron went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg, four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. On the center column is a piece of the airship and a small plaque to the USS Akron airship that went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. On the center column is a small plaque to the USS Akron airship that went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)
In this Thursday, March 21, 2013 photograph, a plaque and a piece of the USS Akron airship are seen at a small veteran's memorial park in a neighborhood in Manchester Township. The USS Akron airship went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg, four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. On the center column is a small plaque to the USS Akron airship that went down in a violent storm off the New Jersey coast. The disaster claimed 73 lives, more than twice as many as the crash of the Hindenburg four years later. The USS Akron, a 785foot dirigible, was in its third year of flight when a violent storm sent it crashing tailfirst into the Atlantic Ocean shortly after midnight on April 4, 1933. (AP Photo/Mel Evans)